Non-contact IR analysis simplifies on-line quality control.A new method of mid-infrared analysis allows on-line monitoring of both the composition and physical properties of a plastic while it is being compounded or extruded. Up to now, mid-IR spectroscopy was limited to use in the laboratory and only for gases. The new technique, Transient Infrared Spectroscopy (TIRS TIRS Thermal Infrared Scanner TIRS TL1 Interface Router Service (Nortel) TIRS Tactical Information Retrieval System ), was developed at the Ames Laboratory Ames Laboratory is a United States Department of Energy national laboratory located in Ames, Iowa. Compared to most other DOE laboratories, it is small, employing about 420 people. It is located on the campus of Iowa State University. , a U.S. Dept. of Energy lab at Iowa State University Academics ISU is best known for its degree programs in science, engineering, and agriculture. ISU is also home of the world's first electronic digital computing device, the Atanasoff–Berry Computer. . It performs non-contact, real-time monitoring of solid or melt-phase process streams. TIRS has been demonstrated on a wide variety of process lines at speeds of 4 cm/sec to 20 meters/sec. It can monitor blend composition, cure level, layer thickness, tensile strength tensile strength Ratio of the maximum load a material can support without fracture when being stretched to the original area of a cross section of the material. When stresses less than the tensile strength are removed, a material completely or partially returns to its , and any other property that correlates with a material's IR spectrum. The Iowa State Univ. Research Foundation holds patents on the technique, but a license is not required because TIRS was developed with government grants. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Roger Jones, one of the developers, a TIRS system is said to be simple to assemble from off-the shelf components, using either a Fourier Transform Fourier transform In mathematical analysis, an integral transform useful in solving certain types of partial differential equations. A function's Fourier transform is derived by integrating the product of the function and a kernel function (an exponential function raised to Infrared (FTIR FTIR Fourier Transform Infrared (spectroscopy) FTIR Frustrated Total Internal Reflection FTIR Fourier Transfer Ir ) spectrometer or a non-dispersive IR detector (InfraRed detector) A sensing device that picks up radiation in the infrared band. Used extensively for still and video night vision cameras, cooled IR detectors can sense the makeup of nebulae light years in the distance. . How it works A type of emission spectroscopy Emission spectroscopy is a spectroscopic technique which examines the wavelengths of photons emitted by atoms or molecules during their transition from an excited state to a lower energy state. , TIRS uses the spontaneous mid-infrared emission that all materials give off by virtue of their temperature. The hotter they are, the more mid-IR radiation they emit. Conventional mid-IR spectroscopy requires that solid samples be very thin so IR radiation can be transmitted through them, or that they be very smooth and stationary so radiation can be reflected off them in reproducible fashion. In conventional emission spectroscopy, a sample is warmed above ambient temperature Outside temperature at any given altitude, preferably expressed in degrees centigrade. until it emits sufficient IR light, and then the emission spectrum emission spectrum: see spectrum. is recorded. According to Jones, very thin, warm samples emit primarily at the same wavelength that they preferentially absorb when IR is passed through them, so analysis of the spectra is identical to conventional transmission spectroscopy. But if a warm sample is too thick, it emits all wavelengths, resulting in a featureless "blackbody blackbody Theoretical surface that absorbs all radiant energy that falls on it, and radiates electromagnetic energy at all frequencies, from radio waves to gamma rays, with an intensity distribution dependent on its temperature. " spectrum. TIRS overcomes this limitation through use of a small jet of warm or cool air to strike a moving process stream as it passes an IR spectrometer. With a warm air jet, the heated surface layer of plastic acts as a thin emission source separate from the rest of the process stream. Because it is thin, it produces a structured, analytically useful spectrum, similar to that which would be produced with a physically thin sample. This structured emission is easily distinguished from the featureless blackbody radiation blackbody radiation The electromagnetic radiation that a perfect blackbody would give off at a given temperature. A warm blackbody would emit radiation with a higher average frequency than a cooler one. Noun 1. of the underlying material stream. Since the material is moving, the heated layer passes out of the spectrometer's field of view before it can thicken thick·en tr. & intr.v. thick·ened, thick·en·ing, thick·ens 1. To make or become thick or thicker: Thicken the sauce with cornstarch. The crowd thickened near the doorway. 2. and cool. A cooling air jet can be used for materials above ambient temperature, such as plastic melt strands emerging from an extruder. The cool jet produces a thin, cooler layer on the surface of the strand. The cooled layer emits less IR because of its lower temperature. This layer absorbs IR radiation from the hotter core of the material, so the spectrometer observes a structured transmission spectrum for the cooled layer similar to conventional transmission spectroscopy. What's special about TIRS In making the plastic stream appear thin to the spectrometer, TIRS differs from other on-line IR methods, which perform transmission spectroscopy through the melt by forcing a side stream of melt from the extruder through a spectroscopy cell. That cell must be very narrow or else the melt will be completely opaque in the mid-infrared. The thin cells have a tendency to clog and become contaminated contaminated, v 1. made radioactive by the addition of small quantities of radioactive material. 2. made contaminated by adding infective or radiographic materials. 3. an infective surface or object. with residual material deposits, Jones notes. With non-contact TIRS, there is no manipulation of the process stream or changes to the process line. In tests performed by GE Plastics at Mt. Vernon, Ind., the TIRS unit was positioned next to the extruder die to observe the strands as they left the die. In these tests, TIRS analyzed the composition of a PC/PBT/ABS blend as it emerged from an extruder. TIRS also has advantages over near-IR (NIR NIR Near Infrared NIR National Inventory Report NIR National Identity Register (UK) NIR Near-Infrared Reflectance NIR Non-Ionizing Radiation NIR Net International Reserves NIR National Internet Registry NIR Northern Ireland Railways ) spectrometry, says Jones. "Absorption peaks in the NIR range are much weaker and broader than mid-IR." That does allow much thicker melt streams to be analyzed than with mid-IR. "This gets around cell clogging, but it is still a contact measurement" and requires a side stream. Because NIR peaks overlap a great deal, chemometric analyses are essential for making sense of the spectra. Chemometrics are also used to get more precise results with TIRS, but its spectra can be analyzed by classic methods, since the height of individual peaks often correlates with concentrations of specific components. Anatomy of a TIRS system TIRS uses either an FTIR spectrometer or a non-dispersive IR detector. The size and location of peaks in the emission spectrum correlate with the composition and other properties of the test material. Where only one property is to be determined, the strength of a single peak is sufficient, so that a non-dispersive IR detector tuned to that peak suffices, which reduces the monitor size and cost. An FTIR detector is called for when multiple properties are monitored or where there is a need for increased accuracy and reliability. The Ames Laboratory TIRS unit includes an FTIR spectrometer. Fixtures were added for a mirror to aim the spectrometer at the process stream and for the TIRS air jet. The warm-jet version employs a hot-air gun such as is used to seal plastic bags. For the cool-jet version, a blower nozzle aims a stream of ambient air. Chemometric partial-least-square (PLS See playlist. ) analysis is used to correlate whole spectra with the properties to be determined. PLS builds a model that relates the two using a "training set" of spectra for samples whose properties have been measured off-line by a reference method. This model allows TIRS with an FTIR system to acquire a mid-infrared spectrum and convert it into an analysis in as little as 2 sec. Systems with non-dispersive detectors are even faster. By shifting the distance between the air jet and the IR detector, users can change how long the induced cool or warm surface layer thickens before its spectrum is measured. This adjusts how deeply into the moving material the TIRS unit observes, limited only by how opaque the material is to IR radiation. In one trial, TIRS was used by staff at Eastman Kodak to monitor layer thickness in an extrusion coating system that applies two polymer coatings--a main layer and a tie layer--simultaneously to a paper substrate. Says Jones, "We were able to measure the thickness of each of the layers separately using the TIRS spectra by the relative changes in peaks arising from the main layer, the tie layer, and the substrate." TIRS was also used to determine tensile strength of soy protein Soy protein is generally regarded as the storage protein held in discrete particles called protein bodies which are estimated to contain at least 60–70% of the total soybean protein. polymers made by researchers at Iowa State. Says Jones, "We were able to correlate our TIRS spectra with tensile strength. The strength of the material was changed by varying both the concentration of an additive--a compositional property--and the extruder screw speed--a non-compositional process parameter. TIRS could track changes produced by either method." NEED TO KNOW MORE? For more information on this company and its products, visit www.ptonline.com/suppliers. Ames Laboratory, Ames, Iowa (contact John McClelland) (515) 294-7948 * www.external.ameslab.gov |
|
||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion